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Friday, December 23, 2011

Brioche Loaf for Sandwiches and French Toast

From the kitchen of One Perfect Bite...My family loves really good French toast and to be honest with you they're more than a little spoiled, at least at this time of year. I have a lovely recipe for French toast that I'll happily share with you, but the only thing that really sets it apart from others you have seen, is the bread I use to make it. At Christmas time, I whip out eggs and lots of butter and make a loaf-shaped brioche that is used to prepare holiday sandwiches and French toast. There will be a second, more classic brioche, served for breakfast on New Years day, but Christmas and French toast have become a tradition in our home and this bread is where it starts. If you have an electric stand mixer and can wait 24 hours before baking the dough, the bread, while not easy to make, is doable. It also helps to be a little crazy, but we'll talk of that another day. You also will be asked to put your creative instincts aside. Even small changes to this recipe can be disastrous, and, I know from experience, that you will be tempted to make them. Please don't! This recipe was developed by Sally Darr for Gourmet magazine about 10 years ago. It works if you follow it. Here's the deal. The magic that will transform the sticky mass you've created into a workable bread dough, occurs in the refrigerator, not on the bread board. The addition of more flour might make a workable dough but it will not make brioche.So, I'm going to ask you to suspend belief, and trust me on this one. That shaggy mass will turn into brioche without the addition of extra flour and you will love its crust and crumb. Here's the recipe. I double-dog dare you to give it a try.

Directions:1) To make starter: Stir milk and sugar together in a small bowl. Sprinkle yeast over mixture and let stand until foamy, about 10 to 15 minutes. Stir 1/2 cup flour into yeast mixture, forming a soft dough, and cut a deep X across top. Let starter rise, covered with plastic wrap, at room temperature, 1 hour.

2) To make dough: Combine salt, sugar, and hot milk in a small bowl and stir until salt and sugar are dissolved. Fit mixer with whisk attachment, then beat 2 eggs at medium-low speed until fluffy. Add sugar mixture and beat until combined well. With motor running, add in order, beating after each addition: 1/2 cup flour, remaining egg, 1/2 cup flour, about one fourth of butter, and remaining 1/2 cup flour. Beat mixture 1 minute. Remove bowl from mixer and fit mixer with dough-hook attachment. Spread starter onto dough with a rubber spatula and return bowl to mixer. Beat dough at medium-high speed 6 minutes, or until dough is smooth and elastic. Add remaining butter and beat 1 minute, or until butter is incorporated. The dough will be a sticky stringy mass at this point. This is normal, so not to worry. DO NOT add more flour. Lightly butter a large bowl and scrape dough into bowl with rubber spatula. Lightly dust dough with flour to prevent a crust from forming. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let dough rise at room temperature until more than doubled in bulk, 2 to 3 hours. Punch down dough and lightly dust with flour. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and chill dough, punching down after first hour, at least 12 hours. Dough may be chilled up to 3 days. Punch down dough each day.

3) To form and bake brioche: Butter a 9 x 5-inch loaf pan. Remove dough from refrigerator and turn onto a well floured surface. Flour your hands and form dough into a 9-inch log. Transfer to pan. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and allow to rise in a warm, draft-free place until dough has more than doubled in bulk, about 2 hours. Adjust rack to middle of oven before preheating to 375 degrees F. Mix egg yolk and heavy cream together in a small bowl. Brush over surface of bread. Bake loaf until golden brown, about 35 minutes. Cool bread in pan on a rack for 20 minutes, then turn out onto rack and allow loaf to cool completely, about 1 hour. Yield: 1 loaf.

I adore brioche. It is my go to dough for sticky buns because it makes them so incredibly decadent and supple. There really is no other bread that compares to its texture and flavor. It has been far too long since I've made homemade bread and given the chill in the air there seems no better time. Happy holidays.

What a great photo of your brioche loaf - makes me wish for a slice right away! I don't know if I'll try it, although if I were to give it a go it would be from your recipe. I've found that following your recipes always gives me a good result.

Mary, you've inspired me to make brioche again. Many years ago I traveled to NYC for several weekends to take a class at the New School in croissant and brioche. The fact that both are labor-intensive has kept me from making them for a very long time, but I remember what incredible bread pudding can be had with stale brioche. Merry Christmas.

I'm a little crazy too, so this is something I would actually do. My assignment for Christmas dinner is to make my challah bread. I'll have to make the dough the day before and let it rise overnight like you did here. Thanks for the warnings about messing with the recipe....that is good to know!

I make a brioche loaf in my breadmaker, takes all the effort out of it. Makes amazing french toast the next day too. Even old breadmakers without a brioche cycle can probably make it, if you just figure out what time the second knead takes place and add the extra butter then. Probably use the rapid loaf cycle for this.

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